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The importance and evolution of leadership

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Title: The importance and evolution of leadership


1
The importance and evolution of leadership
  • Abraham P. Buunk
  • Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
  • University of Groningen

2
What am I doing here?
  • The Economist Magazine (2006, p.5)
  • Organizations do not know how to lead people
    because
  • .human resources as a discipline has not
    achieved anything like the level of
    sophistication of, say, finance
  • Astronomists dont know how to move the stars

3
The business and political world seems obsessed
with leadership
  • leadership everywhere important issue
  • Google 11.800.000 hits
  • thousands of models with an endearing
    simplicity and superficiality

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The business and political world seems obsessed
with leadership
  • leadership important issue
  • Google 11.800.000 hits
  • thousands of models
  • thousands of consulting agencies

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The business and political world seems obsessed
with leadership
  • leadership important issue
  • Google 11.800.000 hits
  • thousands of models
  • thousands of consulting agencies
  • direct advices

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The business and political world seems obsessed
with leadership
  • leadership important issue
  • Google 11.800.000 hits
  • thousands of models
  • thousands of consulting agencies
  • but also psychologists thousands of scientific
    articles
  • psychology of leadership
  • at least 15 forms of leadership

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Why a preoccupation with leadership?
  • Good leadership has strong effects on
    productivity
  • In trawlers, skipper accounts for 35-49 of catch
  • CEOs account for about 14 of the variance in a
    firms financial results

16
The Bloom Van Reenen study
  • 700 manufacturing firms in US and Europe
  • company performance
  • productivity, profitability, sales growth,
    survival rates
  • about 50 explained by four characteristics of
    leadership

17
1. Operations (e.g., process improvement,
internal communication)
18
2. Targets (e.g., rigor and transparency of
goals)
19
3. Monitoring (e.g., tracking and following up on
individual performance)
20
4. Incentives (links between pay and performance)
21
Why should people want to lead?
  • Invest large amounts of time
  • Take responsibility for groups outcomes
  • Subordinates rarely happy
  • Put personal security at risk

22
Why should people want to follow?
  • Work for someone elses income and prestige
  • Dependent on someone else
  • Lack of attention and appreciation
  • Take risks for the benefit of someone else

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Evolutionary perspective
  • Humans as animals
  • How desires for leadership and followership are
    product of evolution

25
Why would someone want to be a dominant or a
submissive?
  • Two types of causes
  • proximate strong desire for power and
    achievement vs. lack of ambition and lazyness
  • ultimate dominance and submission were adaptive
    in evolutionary past

26
Human behavior as result of evolution
27
But why a leader?The importance of status
  • 1999 Columbine high school shootings, Colorado
  • 13 people killed
  • This is for all the people who made fun of us
    all these years
  • 2003 Oaklyn, New Jersey plans to do the same
  • Leader in Oaklyn speech impediment, bow legged
    and stooped gait, strange clothes
  • He was an easy target, but never lashed out. He
    just took it Everybody picked on him

28
The male motivation to attain status and dominance
  • Leaders overwhelming men
  • Geert Hofstede around the world men more
    interested in power, leadership and
    self-realization
  • Linked to testosteron, motivates competition for
    status
  • Does not mean at all that men are better leaders

29
The ultimate cause of the male drive for status
and dominanceSexual selection and parental
investment theory
  • Reproductive success of males limited by access
    to mates
  • Males therefore more competitive and more
    aggressive than
  • females to gain access to sexually receptive
    females, and to prevent
  • access of other males to females
  • For females generally off-spring requires much
    more investment
  • than for males, reproductive success limited
    by access to resources
  • Therefore more choosy in partner choice than
    males status,
  • dominance, good genes
  • Among human males, long evolutionary history and
    ongoing
  • evolution rooted in competition over these
    characteristics
  • Men successful in this competition had more
    offspring

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Dominance and status enhanced reproductive succes
  • Yanomanö of Amazone men who killed other men have
    more wives and children
  • Kipsigis of Kenia men with more acres have more
    reproductive succes
  • Dzengis Khan 16 million male descendants
  • Laura Betzig six early civilizations the higher
    the status, the more wives
  • Even regulated by law Incas
  • principal persons 50 women
  • leaders of vassal nations 30 women
  • heads of provinces more than 100.000 people 20
    women
  • governors of at least 100 people 8 women

32
Is there still a link between status and
reproductive success among men and not among
women?
33
Reproductive success and income
34
Result of evolution hormonal effects of winning
and loosing
  • Higher status accompanied by higher androgen and
    serotonin levels good feeling
  • Lower status accompanied by elevated cortisol
    levels, greater physiological stress changes
    during conflict
  • Following competitive games (even chess!) male
    winners (and supporters!) show elevation of
    testosteron

35
Winning an election testosteron level increases
  • Importance of winning

36
Sex differences
  • Males used to functioning in hierarchies, more
    direct ways of dominating and dealing with
    rivals, accept being subordinate,
  • Females less used to functioning in hierarchies,
    more indirect ways, such as spreading rumors,
    excluding, ignoring, and isolating rivals,
    preventing other females from being successful

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Queen Bee effect women block careers of other
women
  • Naomi Ellemers and colleagues
  • (University of Leiden,
  • The Netherlands)

39
How male supervisors judge their subordinates
fair and egalitarian
40
How female supervisors judge their subordinates
biased against their own sex
41
Questions and comments!
42
The Russian Doll Model layers of ways of
attaining dominance
43
Major evolved strategies for achieving dominance
  • 1. Direct fights, physical strength
  • Bigger animals more dominant in many species,
    smaller animals prevent getting involved in fight

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The inner Russian Doll (1) tendency to fight
physically is still non-verbally manifest
47
The inner Russian doll (2) unconscious
perception of physical dominance of rivals
subliminal priming
48
Rivalry in men
90
85
80
75
rivalry
70
65
60
55
50

Subliminal exposure to physically dominant
Subliminal exposure to physically non-dominant
49
The inner Russian doll (3) height still matters
a lot
50
Sarkozy Frankly, Dom, what do I still lack to
win the elections in 2007?Dom Oh not that
much. At its most just a 20 centimeters
51
The importance of height in organizations
  • Taller men
  • are more persuasive
  • held in higher esteem
  • more likely to emerge as leader
  • perform better
  • earn more 15 cm equals 166.000,- over 30
    years
  • have higher positions in organizations
  • are more liked by women
  • have more reproductive success

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Rivalry among women
  • Height for women less positive
  • Related to depression
  • Women of medium height higher fertility and
    reproductive success
  • Men dont like women taller than they are (except
    Sarkozy)
  • Smaller women advantage

54
Test for intrasexual rivalry with questions like
  • When I go out, I can't stand it when men pay
    more attention to a friend of mine than to me
  • I just dont like very ambitious women
  • I can't stand it when I meet another woman who
    has accomplished more in her life than I have
  • I wouldn't hire a highly competent woman as a
    colleague

55
Intrasexual rivalry among females
56
Why would individuals be submissive?Submission
to physically stronger animales is functional
  • Prevent attacks, being killed, expelled from
    group
  • Benefit from knowledge dominant animal
  • Wait ones chances Prepare for future dominance

57
Major evolved strategies for achieving dominance
  • 1. Direct fights, physical strength
  • 2. Social skills machiavellianism

58
Social brain hypothesisMaintaining and
manipulating relationships
  • Why around 150 people invited?
  • Why not 75? Or 350? No coincidence!
  • Evolution human brain very fast 2.5 millions of
    years ago
  • Not at all parallel to increase of complexity of
    technology
  • Not at all parallel to increase of complexity of
    environment
  • Robin Dunbar (University of Oxford) being able
    to function in large groups

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100
Mean group size of primates
10
1
0.1
1
10
Neocortex Ratio
61
150 - the magic number
  • number of people we can know and interact with on
    a personal basis

62
Around 150 found everywhere
  • clans of hunter gatherers
  • military units
  • business organizations
  • church congregations (200 maximum of coherent,
    well-integrated congregation)
  • size of personal networks

63
Knowing personally about 1000 people
64
Functioning in groups, and especially being and
becoming dominant, requires intelligence
65
Why does functioning in large groups require
intelligence?
  • Animals move of their own volition and have
    feelings and thoughts
  • To keep track of that requires enormous
    computational capacity

66
  • Remembering behavior of group members, whos to
    trust
  • Recognizing cheaters and free-riders
  • Floating social norms without being caught
  • Manipulating others for ones own goals

67
Leaders not necessarily nicer, often manipulators
  • Better liars
  • Lack of empathy
  • Narcissistic tendency

68
Power and perspective taking
  • Adam Galinsky (Kellogg School of Management)
  • Power diminishes perspective taking
  • Powerful people are less likely to adopt another
    persons perspective

69
The E test
  • Draw an
  • E
  • on your forehead

70
Power and taking another persons visual
perspective
71
Submission functional
  • bide your time
  • voids at the top emergence of new dominants
  • fish species when dominant male dead, other
    males more testosterone, competitive fights

72
The functionality of submission
  • Margaret Tatcher
  • who bit her tongue - held back criticism until
    criticism with Ted Heath grew
  • then acted
  • by not being submissive, one may forever ruin
    ones chances

73
Promotion tips as submissive strategies
  • Leonard Sayles (1993) based on years of study of
    managers, promotion tips
  • Avoid confrontation
  • Withhold suggestions
  • Do not ask your boss to champion unpopular
    opinions
  • Always agree with your boss
  • Concentrate on presentation skills and looking
    good in meetings with superiors
  • Demonstrate an intense desire for career
    advancement and beat your peers
  • Try to find your next promotion because rapid
    advancement looks good

74
Career success - attaining status and dominance -
is not the same as succesful leadership
  • Commitment to ones career is not the same as
    commitment to the
  • organization
  • No relation between career success and team
    performance
  • Career success socializing, politicking, and
    networking upward ingratiation
  • Effective team leadership communicating,
    motivating, managing conflicts, training of
    subordinates
  • downward affiliation

75
Comments and questions!
76
Major evolved strategies for achieving dominance
  • 1. Direct fights, physical strength
  • 2. Social skills machiavellianism
  • 3. Altruism and heroism

77
The next doll the altruistic doll
  • Competition in social skills in groups lead to
    evolution of additional strategy of attaining
    dominance Altruistic behavior

78
Altruistic leadership
  • Gaining status and prestige through
  • Interfering impartially in conflicts
  • Being fair and generous to followers
  • Showing altruism
  • Self-sacrifice for sake of the group

79
Altruism pays off the self-sacrifcing leader
  • John McCain
  • 1967 prisoner of war (pow) in Vietnam for more
    than five years
  • very badly treated, tortured many times
  • refused to be released as a special favor, if
    fellow pows who were captured earlier were also
    not released
  • benefits from this 40 years later

80
The effectiveness of altruistic leaders
  • Study of Fortune 1000 selection of companies
    that first performed below business sector
    average for 15 years, and than above average for
    15 years
  • Only 11 companies fit profile
  • In each case after new CEO took over
  • Two characteristics of these CEOs

81
Characteristics of most effective CEOs
  • 1. Modest and humble
  • 2. Extraordinarily persistent in pursuit of
    organizational goals

82
What have these two men in common?
83
Charismatic leadership
  • Articulating vision and mission
  • Inducing identification, loyalty, faith, respect,
    inspiration, commitment and devotion to the
    leader
  • Hitler the arrogant non-altruist
  • Mandela the humble altruist
  • Study among Fortune 500 firms leader charisma
    predicted his level of pay, but not firm
    performance

84
Major strategies for achieving dominance
  • 1. Direct fights, physical strength
  • 2. Social skills machiavellianism
  • 3. Altruism and heroism
  • 4. Showing a Peacocks tail

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The human peacock tail producing art
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The human peacock tail beautiful and expensive
goods
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Importance of physical attractiveness
90
Physically attractive people .
  • Are hired more likely
  • Are promoted more likely
  • Are evaluated more positively in terms of their
    performance
  • But ..

91
Crown Princess effect women block careers
particularly of attractive women
  • Experiment among students
  • Job description student assistant working on
    data entry and photocopying, at the same project
    as oneself
  • Personality description, e.g., nice, extravert,
    pleasant, outgoing personality
  • How likely would you hire this person?

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Men and women prefer female candidates
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Both men and women prefer attractive candidates
of the opposite sex
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But for same sex candidates the oppositemen
prefer attractive male candidates, and women
unattractive female candidates
99
A guideline
  • Bright leaders should be directive and tell
    group members what to do the relatively less
    bright should be participative and listen
    (Fiedler House, 1988, p. 76).
  • Make your own choice!

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